From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu Date: Fri, 9 Jun 2000 08:38:53 +0000 From: Per von Zweigbergk Message-ID: Subject: [9fans] Plan9 NAT network firewall on a 386? Topicbox-Message-UUID: b336c8cc-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Hello. This is my initial close contact to the world of plan9, and I don't know a lot about it. I'm from a UNIX background, and I run Linux on my home machines. With that said, I can come to the main point of this post :) I'm considering changing the operating system on my 386/25 with 4 MB of RAM from Slackware Linux 3.9, to plan 9. The complete hardware of the system is the following: - Intel 386 at 25 mHz - 4 MB of RAM (I don't think this can be extended, as there are only four 30 pin SIMM slots, and bigger RAM chips are hard to get hold of in this day and age.) - A 170 MB IBM hard drive with an IDE interface. - Two ISA network cards in non-PnP mode. NE2000 compliant off the shelf stuff. -- Network card 1 connected with a statically assigned IP to the internal network. -- Network card 2 connected to a cable modem with IP's assigned with DHCP. The tasks is has right now are: - NAT (ip masquerading) firewall to let the network access the Internet. - Telnet server four "outsiders" to connect to my workstations which are more powerful. - Emergency IRC machine. :) Would this be possible to run on Plan9 rather than on Linux? I feel like changing firstly for exploration... and possibly less bloat? -- Per von Zweigbergk IRC: pvz (IRCnet, QuakeNet, EFnet, or UnderNet -- choose your poison)